Cover Oregon Director Faces Oregon Lawmakers

Oregon’s online health insurance exchange won’t be up and running in time for people to get covered by the beginning of the year. That was the prediction offered to a pair of legislative panels Wednesday by Cover Oregon’s director. Lawmakers peppered health care managers with examples of problems with the system:

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Rocky King testifies before a panel of Oregon lawmakers.

Credit Chris Lehman

Democratic Representative Brian Clem's mother-in-law has Lou Gehrig's disease. She was kicked off her former health insurance plan. So Clem and his wife looked forward to the opening of Oregon's online insurance marketplace.

Brian Clem: "We were excited about Cover Oregon, because the system before that really sucked."

But Clem's optimism quickly turned to frustration when not only were they unable to enroll her online. They also had trouble submitting the paper application.

Brian Clem: "In between feeding tubes and my daughter and this job and my wife's job, we're trying to get her covered. The fax machine, five times we tried yesterday. Busy every time."

John Lively: "Rocky, with all due respect, my first concern goes to credibility."

Democratic representative John Lively asked King how Oregonians should be expected to believe any promise of future website functionality when delays have been piling up. King responded with the same phrase...

Rocky King: "That's on me."

...uttered by President Barack Obama in response to the troubled health insurance rollout on the federal level. King says Cover Oregon should have been more upfront about the problems leading up to the planned October First launch.

Rocky King: "We did the best that we could to get the information out, but there was a lot of uncertainty about what we could do and couldn't do. And very frankly I wasn't sure what to say."

King says based on conversations with Cover Oregon's tech contractor, Oracle, the new goal for a fully functioning website is mid-December. That would come too late for people to meet the deadline to be covered by January 1st. And King himself says the next target date isn't set in stone.

Rocky King: "I no longer hope. I've taken that word out of my language. When I see it, I'll believe it. And until that time, I'll bring on whatever resources are necessary and do whatever I can to make sure than Oregonians can get coverage."

For now, that means hundreds of workers pouring over paper applications. Applications that primarily arrived by mail...not the fax machine.